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how to outsource accounting services in Italy

How to Outsource Accounting Services in Italy: Step‑by‑step for Foreign Companies & Smes

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to outsource accounting services in Italy is essential for any foreign company or SME that must comply with Italian tax, payroll, and reporting obligations without building an in‑house finance team from scratch. The process spans six distinct phases, from scoping internal requirements and appointing a registered commercialista through to technical onboarding with Italy’s mandatory Sistema di Interscambio (SDI) e‑invoicing platform, data migration, and go‑live for statutory filings. With Italy’s digital compliance landscape continuing to tighten through 2026, including expanded electronic VAT controls and real‑time reporting requirements, getting the onboarding sequence right is no longer optional, it is a prerequisite for avoiding penalties and operational disruption.

This guide sets out the eligibility criteria, required documents, timeline, costs, and SLA items that foreign companies and Italian SMEs need to address before the first invoice is processed or the first VAT return is filed on their behalf.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

Outsourcing accounting in Italy means engaging an external provider, onshore, nearshore, or offshore, to handle some or all of a company’s bookkeeping, VAT returns, payroll coordination, and statutory annual accounts. The arrangement is available to any entity with Italian tax or employment obligations: Italian‑incorporated companies (such as an SRL or S.p.A.), branches and permanent establishments of foreign groups, foreign companies holding an Italian VAT registration (Partita IVA), and SMEs of any nationality operating within Italian territory.

Outsourcing does not remove the legal obligation to appoint a dottore commercialista, a registered accounting professional who retains statutory sign‑off responsibilities for tax filings and financial statements. The provider delivers the day‑to‑day processing; the commercialista ensures regulatory compliance. This division of responsibilities must be documented clearly before any bookkeeping outsourcing in Italy begins.

The scope of outsourced services typically covers accounts payable and receivable processing, bank reconciliations, periodic VAT filings via the F24 payment model, SDI electronic invoicing, payroll runs and social contribution reporting to INPS and INAIL, and preparation of the annual bilancio (statutory accounts). Foreign companies should expect the onboarding process to take 4–10 weeks, depending on the complexity of existing records, the number of employees, and the technical readiness of the company’s systems.

Eligibility and Requirements for Outsourcing Accounting in Italy

Before a provider can begin processing transactions, several prerequisites must be in place. Failing to complete these steps will stall onboarding and may expose the company to filing gaps.

Entities That Can Outsource

Any of the following entity types may outsource accounting services in Italy:

  • Italian companies (SRL, S.p.A., S.a.s.). Domestically incorporated entities with full Italian tax residency.
  • Branches and permanent establishments. Foreign companies with a registered branch or PE that triggers Italian corporate tax and reporting obligations.
  • Foreign VAT registrants. Non‑resident companies that have obtained a Partita IVA directly or through a fiscal representative (rappresentante fiscale) for VAT purposes.
  • SMEs with payroll obligations. Any business employing staff in Italy, regardless of parent company domicile, that must register with INPS and INAIL.

Mandatory Registrations Before a Provider Can Operate

The following registrations and arrangements are requirements that must be completed before outsourcing can begin:

  • Partita IVA (VAT number). Issued by the Agenzia delle Entrate. Non‑resident entities that do not register directly must appoint a fiscal representative. The provider will require a copy of the VAT registration certificate.
  • SDI / FatturaPA access. If the company issues or receives invoices in Italy, it must have an SDI channel code or PEC (certified email) address for e‑invoicing routing. This must be operational before the provider can transmit invoices on the company’s behalf.
  • Employer registration (INPS/INAIL). Required if payroll is within the outsourcing scope. The company must hold valid employer registration numbers; the provider will need these to process payroll withholdings and social contributions.
  • Appointment of a commercialista. A dottore commercialista registered with the Consiglio Nazionale dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili (CNDCEC) must be formally appointed and delegated authority for statutory filings and electronic signatures.
  • GDPR data processing agreement. Where personal data is transferred to the provider, particularly cross‑border, a signed DPA compliant with the GDPR is required before any employee or customer data is shared.

How to Outsource Accounting Services in Italy: Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following six steps represent the end‑to‑end process for outsourcing accounting in Italy. Each step identifies the responsible party, the key deliverables, and the typical duration. The timeline table below provides a consolidated view.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Prepare scope & export data Company finance lead / CFO 1–2 weeks
2. Appoint commercialista & complete KYC Company + commercialista 1–3 weeks
3. Select provider & sign SLA Company procurement / legal 1–3 weeks
4. Technical onboarding (SDI + software) Provider + Company IT 1–3 weeks
5. Data migration & trial month Provider + Company finance 2–4 weeks
6. Go‑live and statutory handover Provider + commercialista Ongoing; first filings within 1 month of go‑live

Total realistic onboarding: 4–10 weeks, depending on complexity.

Step 1, Prepare Internal Scope and Documentation

Responsible party: Company finance lead or CFO.

Before approaching any provider, the company must map its own processes. This means identifying which functions are in scope, accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, VAT returns, statutory accounts, or all of the above. Document the existing software environment, export formats (CSV, Excel, XML), banking access arrangements, and the chart of accounts currently in use. If the parent company operates in a currency other than EUR, specify FX conversion requirements. Confirm the language in which management reports and correspondence must be delivered. This internal scoping exercise produces a requirements document that becomes the baseline for provider selection and SLA negotiation. Without it, providers cannot quote accurately, and responsibility gaps are inevitable.

Step 2, Appoint a Local Commercialista

Responsible party: Company + commercialista.

Italian law requires certain statutory filings and financial statements to be prepared or signed off by a registered dottore commercialista. The company must appoint one before outsourcing can proceed. To vet candidates, confirm that the individual or firm is registered with the CNDCEC, the national professional body, via its public directory. The appointment should be formalised through a written engagement letter or mandate that specifies:

  • Scope of responsibility. Which filings the commercialista will sign (VAT returns, corporate tax returns, statutory accounts).
  • Delegation and power of attorney. Authority to submit filings electronically on behalf of the company, including use of the commercialista’s digital signature.
  • KYC documentation. The commercialista will require the company’s registration extract, identification of authorised persons, and Partita IVA details for anti‑money‑laundering compliance.

The commercialista acts as the regulatory gatekeeper. The outsourced provider handles processing; the commercialista validates and files. This boundary must be explicit in both engagements.

Step 3, Select Provider and Negotiate SLA / Contract

Responsible party: Company procurement and legal teams.

With the scope document from Step 1 and the commercialista engaged, the company can issue an RFP or approach providers directly. The service‑level agreement (SLA) is the most critical document in the outsourcing arrangement. At a minimum, the SLA should address the following items:

  • Service scope and deliverables. Exhaustive list of tasks, outputs, and frequencies (e.g., monthly VAT reconciliation, quarterly Intrastat submission).
  • Response times. Maximum turnaround for routine queries, urgent filings, and ad‑hoc requests.
  • Confidentiality and data security. Specific obligations under the GDPR, encryption standards, and access controls.
  • Liability and indemnification. Allocation of responsibility if a filing is late or incorrect, including penalty reimbursement provisions.
  • Termination and transfer assistance. Notice periods, data return obligations, and cooperation with a successor provider.
  • Language and reporting format. Templates for management reports, currency, and language of deliverables.

Industry observers expect that SLAs for Italian outsourcing engagements will increasingly include specific SDI uptime and e‑invoicing error‑rate clauses, reflecting the tightening digital compliance environment.

Step 4, Technical Onboarding: Software, Data Feeds, and SDI E‑Invoicing Setup

Responsible party: Provider IT team + Company IT.

This step bridges the contract and the live service. The provider must configure its systems to receive and process the company’s data. Key tasks include:

  • Map file formats. Agree on data exchange formats, typically XML for SDI‑compliant invoices and CSV or API feeds for bookkeeping entries.
  • Set up SDI access. The provider registers or receives delegated access to the company’s SDI channel via the FatturaPA portal. The SDI channel code or PEC address is configured so that electronic invoices can be transmitted and received on the company’s behalf.
  • Decide invoicing flow. Determine whether the provider issues invoices directly through the SDI or whether the company’s ERP generates the XML and the provider validates and transmits.
  • Integrate bookkeeping software. If the company retains its own accounting platform, establish connectivity (API, SFTP, or manual lockbox upload) with the provider’s system. If the provider supplies the platform, agree on user access and reporting dashboards.

A test transmission of at least one invoice through the SDI should be completed before moving to the trial month. Errors in XML formatting or routing at this stage are routine and must be resolved before go‑live.

Step 5, Data Migration and Trial Month

Responsible party: Provider + Company finance team.

The provider imports historical data, opening balances, prior‑period VAT returns, employee payroll records, and chart of accounts, into its systems. A trial processing period follows, typically lasting 2–4 weeks. During this period the provider processes a full cycle of transactions (invoicing, payments, reconciliations) in parallel with or immediately following the company’s existing processes. The company’s finance team compares outputs against known results. Acceptance criteria should be defined in the SLA: for example, reconciliation differences below a stated materiality threshold, VAT return figures matching within a specified tolerance, and payroll calculations verified against manual checks. The trial month is the last opportunity to identify systematic errors before statutory filings begin flowing through the outsourced arrangement.

Step 6, Go‑Live and Handover for Statutory Filings

Responsible party: Provider + commercialista.

Once the trial month passes acceptance criteria, the provider assumes full responsibility for day‑to‑day processing. The first statutory filings, typically the next periodic VAT return and payroll withholdings, are prepared by the provider and reviewed and submitted by the commercialista. A monthly reconciliation cadence should be established: the provider delivers trial balances and supporting schedules; the commercialista reviews them; the company’s finance lead signs off. For statutory annual accounts, the provider prepares the draft bilancio and supporting notes; the commercialista finalises, files with the Registro Imprese, and submits the corporate tax return. This handover marks the transition from project to ongoing service delivery.

Required Documents and Information for Outsourcing Accounting in Italy

The following documents are needed before a provider and commercialista can begin operating on the company’s behalf. Foreign companies should allow additional time for translations, apostilles, or consular legalisations where required.

Document Notes
Company registration extract / certificate of incorporation Issued by the authority in the company’s domicile. Certified copy required; Italian translation if not in English or Italian. Used for KYC onboarding.
Tax ID / VAT registration (Partita IVA) or fiscal representative details Issued by the Agenzia delle Entrate. Must be available before any invoicing. Non‑residents using a fiscal representative must supply the representative’s details.
Power of attorney / delegation to commercialista and provider Signed by an authorised signatory. Must specify scope, filings, electronic signatures, SDI access. May require legalisation for foreign‑issued documents.
Bank account confirmation / bank mandate Bank statements or a bank confirmation letter. Required for AP/AR processing and payroll disbursements.
Identification documents for authorised persons Valid passport or national ID. Notarised copies may be required by the provider for KYC and anti‑money‑laundering checks.
Chart of accounts and previous accounting files Export from the prior system in CSV, Excel, or standard accounting format. Opening balances are essential for migration.
Payroll registers / employment contracts (if payroll is in scope) Copies of employment contracts, employee tax codes (codice fiscale), past payroll runs, and INPS/INAIL registration numbers.
SDI credentials or invoicing routing instructions SDI channel code or PEC address for receiving/sending e‑invoices. Provider may request delegated SDI access via the FatturaPA portal.
VAT returns and previous filings (PDF / XML) Last 12 months of VAT returns and XML e‑invoice archives for reconciliation during migration.
GDPR data processing agreement (DPA) Signed agreement between company and provider. Mandatory for any transfer of personal data, especially cross‑border.

Companies headquartered outside the EU should confirm whether documents require an apostille under the Hague Convention or consular legalisation. Providers typically supply a pre‑onboarding checklist specifying exact format and certification requirements.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Outsourced Accounting in Italy

Once the outsourced arrangement is live, the provider and commercialista must observe Italy’s statutory filing calendar. The table below summarises the principal deadlines. Exact dates depend on the company’s fiscal year and whether it files VAT on a monthly or quarterly basis.

Filing / Task Frequency Typical Deadline
VAT (IVA) periodic filing / F24 payment Monthly or quarterly 16th of the month following the reporting period (monthly filers); quarterly deadlines per statutory calendar
E‑invoicing (SDI) transmission Continuous Within 12 days of the transaction date; SDI technical requirements must be operational at go‑live
Payroll withholdings / social contributions (INPS/INAIL) Monthly 16th of the month following the payroll period for most contribution types
Annual statutory accounts (Bilancio) Annual Approval within 120 days of financial year‑end (extendable to 180 days in specific circumstances); filing with Registro Imprese within 30 days of approval
Intrastat (where applicable) Monthly or quarterly 25th of the month following the reporting period; provider handles submission if in scope

The first VAT return processed after onboarding must be reconciled carefully. The provider and commercialista should confirm that all invoices transmitted via SDI during the transition period are correctly captured in the return. Any gap in e‑invoicing routing during the switchover can result in omitted transactions and an incorrect VAT liability.

Costs, Fees, and Tax Considerations for Outsourcing Accounting in Italy

The cost of outsourcing accounting services in Italy varies by transaction volume, number of employees, reporting complexity, and the level of financial management support required. The table below provides typical market ranges in EUR. All figures represent indicative ranges based on prevailing market pricing and should not be treated as fixed quotations.

Item Typical Amount (EUR) Notes
Basic bookkeeping (small SME) €400–€1,200 / month Depends on transaction volume and posting frequency
Full outsourced accounting (VAT returns, AP/AR) €1,200–€3,000 / month Includes supplier invoice processing, bank reconciliations, periodic VAT filings
Payroll coordination (per employee) €20–€80 / employee / month Varies by payroll complexity, benefits administration, and number of pay elements
Controller / accounting manager support €3,000–€7,500+ / month Higher‑level financial management, reporting, and advisory
One‑off onboarding & data migration €500–€5,000 Single cost; depends on volume of historical data and cleanup required
SDI e‑invoicing technical setup €200–€1,000 Single setup/integration fee; depends on system complexity
Statutory year‑end accounts preparation €800–€5,000 Depends on company size, audit requirement, and number of notes to financial statements

Provider fees are generally subject to Italian VAT where the provider is registered in Italy. For providers established outside Italy, the VAT treatment depends on the place‑of‑supply rules for B2B services. Companies should confirm the VAT position with their commercialista before signing the contract. It is important to note that the provider’s responsibilities for withholding and remitting taxes do not replace the company’s own statutory obligations, the commercialista must be explicit about which filings remain the company’s direct responsibility and which are delegated.

Companies should also budget a contingency of 10–20 % above quoted fees for the first six months to account for unexpected data cleanup, additional translation, or process adjustments during the stabilisation period.

What Changes in 2026: Compliance and Procedural Updates for Outsourcing Accounting in Italy

Italy’s digital tax compliance framework continues to evolve. The following developments are directly relevant to companies outsourcing their accounting function in 2026:

  • Mandatory SDI e‑invoicing is fully operational. All B2B and B2C invoices must be transmitted in XML format via the Sistema di Interscambio, managed through the FatturaPA portal. Providers must support the current XML schema and be capable of handling real‑time routing to and from PEC addresses where required. Any provider that cannot demonstrate SDI capability should be excluded from consideration.
  • Expanded electronic VAT controls. The Agenzia delle Entrate has progressively expanded pre‑populated VAT return data using SDI‑sourced invoice information. The likely practical effect is that discrepancies between e‑invoices transmitted via SDI and periodic VAT returns will be flagged automatically, increasing the compliance burden on providers to maintain timely and accurate reconciliations.
  • Digital filing and audit readiness. Industry observers expect continued tightening of electronic record‑keeping and digital audit requirements. Providers must ensure that all accounting records, supporting documents, and e‑invoices are stored digitally in the formats prescribed by the Agenzia delle Entrate and are accessible for inspection on demand. Companies should require their provider to confirm digital archiving (conservazione sostitutiva) capability in the SLA.

Companies onboarding a new provider in 2026 should treat SDI technical readiness and digital archiving capability as non‑negotiable selection criteria. The cost of retrofitting these capabilities after go‑live is significantly higher than building them into the original onboarding plan.

Common Pitfalls When Outsourcing Accounting in Italy and How to Avoid Them

  • Incomplete KYC documentation. Missing or uncertified company documents cause the most common onboarding delays. Prepare and legalise all documents before approaching providers.
  • Missing or incorrect SDI routing. A wrong SDI channel code or misconfigured PEC address means invoices are not received or transmitted. Run a test transmission during Step 4 and verify routing with at least one counterparty.
  • Poorly scoped SLA. Responsibility gaps, especially around who files VAT returns and who signs statutory accounts, create compliance exposure. Include explicit clauses for every filing obligation.
  • GDPR non‑compliance on data transfers. Transferring employee or customer data to a provider (especially cross‑border) without a signed DPA is a regulatory breach. Execute the DPA before sharing any personal data.
  • Failure to appoint a registered commercialista. Attempting to rely solely on the provider for statutory filings without a CNDCEC‑registered commercialista leaves the company without a legally authorised signatory. This must be resolved before go‑live.
  • Skipping the trial month. Going live without a parallel‑run or trial period means errors surface in actual statutory filings. Require defined acceptance criteria in the SLA and do not waive them under time pressure.
  • Underestimating migration costs. Historical data is rarely clean. Budget a contingency for data cleanup, re‑coding of chart‑of‑accounts entries, and reconciliation of opening balances.
  • Not specifying language and reporting format. If the parent company requires reports in English but the provider defaults to Italian, misunderstandings multiply. Lock templates, language, and currency into the contract at signing.
  • Ignoring Intrastat obligations. Companies trading goods within the EU may have Intrastat reporting obligations that are overlooked during scoping. Confirm thresholds and include Intrastat in the SLA if applicable.
  • No termination or exit plan. If the relationship fails, the company needs its data returned in usable format and cooperation with a successor provider. Include transfer‑assistance and data‑return obligations in the contract.

Conclusion

Learning how to outsource accounting services in Italy is ultimately about sequencing six defined steps, scoping, appointing a commercialista, contracting, technical onboarding, migration, and go‑live, while satisfying the compliance requirements that Italy’s digital tax infrastructure demands. The process is not inherently complex, but it is unforgiving of shortcuts: a missing SDI configuration, an unsigned DPA, or an unclear SLA clause can each translate directly into penalties, data breaches, or filing failures. Companies that invest the time to prepare a thorough onboarding checklist, appoint qualified professionals, and negotiate SLAs with explicit accountability provisions will find that outsourced accounting in Italy delivers material operational and cost advantages.

Those that treat outsourcing as a procurement exercise rather than a compliance project will encounter the pitfalls outlined above. For companies exploring bookkeeping outsourcing in Italy for the first time, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to qualified advisors who can guide the process from initial scoping through to go‑live.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Franco Alessio at STUDIO ALESSIO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Agenzia delle Entrate (Italian Revenue Agency)
  2. FatturaPA / Sistema di Interscambio (SDI) Portal
  3. Normattiva (Italian Official Legislation Portal)
  4. Consiglio Nazionale dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili (CNDCEC)
  5. Registro Imprese / Infocamere (Chamber of Commerce)
  6. RSM Italy
  7. Accace, Accounting Services Italy
  8. PwC Italy

FAQs

How do I outsource accounting services in Italy as a foreign company?
Register for a Partita IVA (or appoint a fiscal representative), appoint a CNDCEC‑registered commercialista, select an accounting provider and negotiate an SLA, set up SDI e‑invoicing access, migrate historical data, complete a trial month, and go live. The full procedure typically takes 4–10 weeks.
Verify the candidate’s registration with the CNDCEC via its public directory. Sign a formal engagement letter specifying filing responsibilities and scope of delegation. Execute a power of attorney authorising the commercialista to submit filings and use a digital signature on the company’s behalf. Provide KYC documentation, including company registration extract and identification of authorised persons.
At a minimum: company registration extract, Partita IVA certificate, power of attorney, bank confirmation, identification documents, chart of accounts, previous accounting files and VAT returns, SDI credentials or PEC address, payroll registers (if applicable), and a signed GDPR data processing agreement. Foreign‑issued documents may require apostille or consular legalisation and Italian translation.
Basic bookkeeping for a small SME typically ranges from €400 to €1,200 per month. Full outsourced accounting with VAT and AP/AR processing ranges from €1,200 to €3,000 per month. Payroll adds €20–€80 per employee per month. One‑off onboarding and migration fees range from €500 to €5,000. Total onboarding takes 4–10 weeks.
Yes. A non‑resident company that is not established in Italy but carries out taxable transactions there may appoint a fiscal representative (rappresentante fiscale) instead of registering directly for a Partita IVA. The fiscal representative assumes joint liability for VAT obligations. The outsourced provider must receive the representative’s details and coordinate filings through them. Companies should confirm the scope of the representative’s liability with their commercialista before proceeding.
Notify the commercialista and the provider immediately. Late filings attract penalties and interest under Italian tax law, though reduced penalties may apply if the filing is submitted within prescribed remediation windows (ravvedimento operoso). Review the SLA to determine whether the provider bears liability for the delay and whether indemnification clauses apply. Document the root cause and update processes to prevent recurrence.
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How to Outsource Accounting Services in Italy: Step‑by‑step for Foreign Companies & Smes

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